This interesting tweet from Washington Redskins quarterback Kirk Cousins is making the rounds:
Tim Dwight |
Cousins is certainly correct about McCaffrey, as Hawkeye fans found out in the Rose Bowl game.
McCaffrey did a number [well, actually, lots of numbers] on Iowa in Stanford's 45-16 victory.
Christian McCaffrey |
The 19-year-old sophomore scored on the first play of the game--a brilliant 75-yard pass play--and set a Rose Bowl record with 368 all-purpose yards.
He has quite a future ahead of him.
The son of former National Football League standout Ed McCaffrey will a favorite [at least my favorite] for the 2016 Heisman Trophy, and is certain to be an NFL standout after completing his Stanford career.
Dwight had quite a banner collegiate and NFL career himself.
However, Iowa fans never thought Hayden Fry, his coach at Iowa, got Dwight the ball often enough.
They always wanted more from the 5-8, 185-pounder who lettered as a Hawkeye from 1994 through 1997.
Dwight finished his Iowa career with Big Ten records for punt return yardage [1,102] and punts returned for touchdowns [5].
Dwight held the Hawkeye record for career receiving touchdowns [21] until 2011, when his numbers were surpassed by Marvin McNutt.
He held the team record for career receiving yards [2,271] until 2010, when Derrell Johnson-Koulianos surpassed those figures.
In 1997, Dwight was a consensus first-team all-American and finished seventh in the Heisman Trophy voting.
In a standout NFL career, Dwight played for the Atlanta Falcons, Sanr Diego Chargers, New England Patriots, New York Jets and Oakland Raiders.
Kirk Cousins |
Ralph Woodard, his grandfather, was a defensive end and tight end for Iowa in 1945, 1947, 1948 and 1949. He received undergraduate and medical degrees from the university. He had a Fort Dodge and Okoboji background.
Cousins was a Hawkeye fan as a kid, but wound up starring as a quarterback at Michigan State before going to the NFL.